PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you all for coming. The President and I will make a
statement. We'll be glad to take two questions per side.

Mr. President, bienvenidos. I'm glad you're here.

First of all, the President and I are friends, and we are personal friends
and we're friends of freedom, as well. Every time I visit with President
Uribe I am impressed by his strength of character and his belief in the
future of his country. Mr. President, I'm proud that you're here. I want
to thank you for the wide-ranging discussions we have had.

The President, of course, has got trade on his mind. I've explained to him
very carefully that we are interested in a trade agreement that we will
negotiate in good faith -- the agreement must be good for the people of
Colombia, as well as the people of the United States. And I assured him
that our trade negotiators will be fair in our approach.

So Mr. President, thank you for your strength of character and thank you
for your friendship and welcome here to the Oval Office.

PRESIDENT URIBE: (As translated.) President Bush, this meeting has been
very constructive, as it always is whenever we meet. I want to thank you,
I want to thank the government and I want to thank the Congress and the
people of the United States for their permanent interest in Colombia.

Our peoples have a relationship that is historic, and it's also a
relationship that is close. We also have a convergence, a convergence that
is based on democratic values and the belief that democracy needs security
in order to build those values.

We have been negotiating an FTA for the last 23 months. All of us have
come to this negotiation in good faith and I'm sure that we will see a
conclusion. This meeting has been good for democracy and it has been good
for the interests of our people, as well as for our shared war on terror
and our war against the drugs that finance that terror.

Thank you.

PRESIDENT BUSH: I understood you. (Laughter.)

PRESIDENT URIBE: Thank you.

PRESIDENT BUSH: Nedra.

Q Yes, Mr. President, do you feel it was appropriate that the Vice
President didn't reveal his shooting accident until the next day, and
through a private citizen? And do you think it was okay that he didn't
talk to you about it, personally, until Monday?

PRESIDENT BUSH: I thought the Vice President handled the issue just fine.
He went through -- and I thought his explanation yesterday was a powerful
explanation. This is a man who likes the outdoors and he likes to hunt.
And he heard a bird flush and he turned and pulled the trigger and saw his
friend get wounded. And it was a deeply traumatic moment for him, and
obviously for the -- it was a tragic moment for Harry Whittington.

And so I thought his explanation yesterday was a very strong and powerful
explanation, and I'm satisfied with the explanation he gave.

Q But are you satisfied about the timing?

PRESIDENT BUSH: I'm satisfied with the explanation he gave.

Mr. President is about to ask somebody to ask a question.

Q Mr. President, is there going to be a free trade agreement with
Colombia, or not?

PRESIDENT BUSH: Espero que si.

Q Pronto? Soon?

PRESIDENT BUSH: Vamos a ver. I spent time visiting with the President
about the progress on negotiations. Free trade agreements are never easy
to negotiate -- es muy dif cile -- and because there's interests. He
represents the people of your country very well. He's a good negotiator,
as is his trade minister. They're strong in representing in representing
the interests of the people, whether they be farmers or manufacturers. And
our people are good, strong negotiators, too.

I'm very hopeful. I'm very hopeful we reach a conclusion. Trade
agreements are never easy, and that's what's very important to understand.
But in my judgment -- and by the way, I, too, have to convince the American
people of the importance of trade agreements -- in my judgment and
agreement with this important country, Colombia, will be a very important
agreement. And so we're working hard.

Steve.

Q Some Democrats say that this shooting episode has contributed to a
perception of White House secrecy. What do you say to that, sir?

PRESIDENT BUSH: I think people are making the wrong conclusion about a
tragic accident. The Vice President was involved in a terrible accident
and it profoundly affected him. Yesterday when he was here in the Oval
Office I saw the deep concern he had about a person who he wounded. And he
-- again, I thought yesterday's explanation was a very strong and important
explanation to make to the American people.

And now our concerns are directed toward the recovery of our friend. I
knew Harry Whittington when I was the governor of Texas, down there in
Austin. He's a fine man. He's been involved in our state's politics for a
long period of time. And, you know, my concern is for Harry, and I know
the Vice President feels the same way.

Q President Bush, do you think the negotiators are making the link
between the fact that it's important to prove legal economy as a way to
fight against terror and illegal drugs?

PRESIDENT BUSH: That's a great question. I believe that when we work
together in a free trade, it strengthens markets and the appreciation for
open markets, whether it be in Colombia or here at home. I believe free
commerce between nations will enable countries -- people in countries to
realize their full potential. I think one of the things that's very
important, I know the President is dedicated on, is a strategy on the one
hand that says he will deal harshly with those who deal in drugs; but he
also recognizes there needs to be economic activity to compete.

We've had a lot of discussions about crop substitution and micro loans for
people to be able to develop ways to make a living that is distinct from
and different from being involved in the drug trade.

And so absolutely we understand the connection between trade of legal
products in a free way between nations as a way to compete against illegal
activities. I appreciate the President's leadership on working hard to
make sure that Colombia is rid of narco trafficking. It's a great country,
with a wonderful history. And the determination to rid the country of
narco trafficking will go down as a very important part of your nation's
history and we'll continue to say that Colombia is a great country with
great enterprise and great hope and great opportunity.